A phytochrome/phototropin chimeric photoreceptor promotes growth of fern gametophytes under limited light conditions

J Exp Bot. 2024 Apr 15;75(8):2403-2416. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erae003.

Abstract

Many ferns thrive even in low-light niches such as under an angiosperm forest canopy. However, the shade adaptation strategy of ferns is not well understood. Phytochrome 3/neochrome (phy3/neo) is an unconventional photoreceptor, found in the fern Adiantum capillus-veneris, that controls both red and blue light-dependent phototropism and chloroplast photorelocation, which are considered to improve photosynthetic efficiency in ferns. Here we show that phy3/neo localizes not only at the plasma membrane but also in the nucleus. Since both phototropism and chloroplast photorelocation are mediated by membrane-associated phototropin photoreceptors, we speculated that nucleus-localized phy3/neo possesses a previously undescribed biological function. We reveal that phy3/neo directly interacts with Adiantum cryptochrome 3 (cry3) in the nucleus. Plant cryptochromes are blue light receptors that transcriptionally regulate photomorphogenesis; therefore, phy3/neo may function via cry3 to synchronize light-mediated development with phototropism and chloroplast photorelocation to promote fern growth under low-light conditions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that phy3/neo regulates the expression of the Cyclin-like gene AcCyc1 and promotes prothallium expansion growth. These findings provide insight into the shade adaptation strategy of ferns and suggest that phy3/neo plays a substantial role in the survival and growth of ferns during the tiny gametophytic stage under low-light conditions, such as those on the forest floor.

Keywords: Adiantum; cryptochrome; fern; neochrome; phototropin; phy3; phytochrome.

MeSH terms

  • Cryptochromes
  • Ferns* / metabolism
  • Germ Cells, Plant
  • Light
  • Phototropins / genetics
  • Phototropism / physiology
  • Phytochrome* / genetics
  • Phytochrome* / metabolism

Substances

  • Phytochrome
  • Phototropins
  • Cryptochromes